When
Opeth released
Heritage in 2011, they had completed the transformation from their death metal origins through progressive death metal in the early 2000s, to full-on prog rock that celebrated their love of
Camel,
Jethro Tull,
ELP, and more. 2014's excellent
Pale Communion furthered those notions as frontman and songwriter
Mikael Åkerfeldt's own vision began to emerge.
Sorceress is the third installment in this phase of the band's career, and while considerably different and more exploratory than its precursors, it also references
Opeth's earlier efforts like
Ghost Reveries and
Blackwater Park, but goes further than either in its diversity.
Uncharacteristically,
Åkerfeldt wrote the album quickly. He enlisted
Tom Dalgety as co-producer (who also engineered and mixed) and
Opeth recorded it in twelve days at Rockfield Studios in Wales.
Sorceress is a madly assorted mixed bag.
Åkerfeldt's inspirations this time out may still recall prog sources, but there are heavier ones, too:
Black Sabbath and the
Ritchie Blackmore/
Jon Lord-era of
Deep Purple. Opener "Persephone" has a brief nylon-string guitar sketch in waltz time that could have come from folk music antiquity. It gives way to the title track and first single. Joakim Svalberg's knotty organ riff dominates the opening moment before a crushing syncopated guitar riff joins in. This track somewhat recalls the
Pale Communion sessions but is far more unhinged. The
Geezer Butler-esque bassline and explosive kick drums make it the most accessible thing here -- its instrumental section keeps it firmly in prog terrain, however. "The Wilde Flowers" is a truly wild melange of musical styles. It's simultaneously heavy, hard, and spacy, with B-3, bluesy and squalling metal guitar breaks, and chorale vocals that drift in the center, weighting it as a solidly prog track. The bludgeoning guitar riff, up-mixed, swinging drums, and punishing bassline in "Chrysalis" make it a highlight; it shines with
Åkerfeldt's finest vocal performance on the album (he can be notoriously lazy). There are lovely acoustic tracks here, too, such as "Will O' the Wisp," which exists in the space between
Pentangle's
Basket of Light and
Led Zeppelin III. "The Seventh Sojourn" melds East Indian drone with North African modalism and exotic hand percussion; strings and keyboards eclipse an oud-like guitar line. It eventually dissembles, wedding near classical polyphony to subdued pop. "Strange Brew" winds through
Peter Gabriel-era
Genesis-esque ponderousness before a bluesy guitar line ushers it into thundering
King Crimson-esque prog adorned with proto-metal riffs and vamps. "A Fleeting Glance" is a dynamic, multifaceted jam showcasing
Åkerfeldt's sophisticated melodic sensibilities while touching on musical terrain from
Pink Floyd and
Gentle Giant to post-Village Green-era
Kinks! "Era" opens with a delicate piano intro but
Opeth erupts a minute later in melodic aggression.
Åkerfeldt's more confident and individualized songwriting on
Sorceress takes it in some dizzying directions. While it goes further musically than their two previous outings, it contains enough of the past to exist in a space that carves out terrain somewhere between
Watershed and
Heritage. Brilliant. ~ Thom Jurek